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Unit 1: Families and Households
4) Demography
Population growth
• Demography: is the study of population,
including factors affecting its size and growth
• Whether a population is growing, declining or
stable is affected by four factors:
 Births and Immigration increases the
population
 Deaths and Emigration decreases the
population
cont. Population growth
• Natural change: is the number of births minus
the number of deaths
• Net migration: is the number immigrating into
country minus the number emigrating from it
• The UK’s population grew from 37m. in 1901 to
61m. today and should reach 71m. by 2031
• Growth has been mostly due to natural change
rather than net migration
Interpretation
• Address all parts of the question
• E.g. If it’s about causes and effects of a
population change, make sure you deal with
both
Births
There are two measures of births
1. birth rate
2. total fertility rate
1. The birth rate
• The birth rate: is the number of live births per 1,000 of
the population per year
• There has been a long-term decline in the birth rate
• In 1900, it was almost 29
• By 2007, it had fallen by more than 60%,  to under 11
• But there have been fluctuations
• There were 3 ‘baby booms’: after the two world wars,
and in the 1960’s
• The rate fell sharply in the 1970’s, rose during the 1980’s
and early 1990’s, and then fell until the recent increase
since 2001
2. The total fertility rate
• The total fertility rate: is the average number of
children a woman will have during her fertile years
(aged 15-44)
• In the 1960’s baby boom, it reached an average of 2.95
children per woman, declining to an all-time low of
1.63 in 2001, before rising slightly to 1.84 in 2006
• The total fertility rate obviously affects family and
household size – the more children a woman has, the
bigger the family:
1. More women are remaining childless nowadays
2. Women are having children later: the average age is
now almost 30
Analysis
• Family size doesn’t just depend on the
number of children
• E.g. Divorce divides a family into two smaller
ones and reduces the chances of the woman
having more children
Reasons for the fall in birth rate
Many social, economic, legal and technological factors are responsible for the
falling birth rate and total fertility rate:
1. Changes in the position of women
2. Fall in the infant mortality rate
3. Children as an economic liability
4. Child-centredness
1. Changes in the position of women
• Increased educational opportunities
• More women working
• Changes in attitudes to family life and
women’s role
• Easier access to divorce
• Access to abortion and contraception
Analysis
• Explain how such factors affect the birth rate
• E.g. ‘Better-educated women have more
options: they can choose a career rather than
marriage and family’
2. Fall in the infant mortality rate
• The infant mortality rate (IMR): is the
number of infants who die before their first
birthday, per 1,000 babies born alive, per
year
• The IMR has fallen greatly in the last century
• In 1900, it was 154; by 2007, it was 5
• A fall in the IMR may cause a fall in the birth
rate: if infants survive, parents will have fewer
of them
Reason for the fall in IMR
• Reasons include improvement in:
- Housing
- Sanitation
- Nutrition
Mothers:
- Knowledge of hygiene and child health
- Health services for mothers and children
• Medical factors did NOT play much until the 1950’s,
when the IMR began to fall due to mass immunisation,
antibiotics, and improved midwifery and obstetrics
3. Children as an economic liability
• Until the late 19th century, children were an
economic asset because they went to work from
an early age
• Now they are an economic liability:
 Laws banning child labour: and introducing
compulsory schooling mean they remain
economically dependent for longer
 Changing norms: about children’s right to a high
standard of living raises their cost
 As a result, parents may be unable to afford to
have a large family
4. Child-centredness
• Childhood is now socially constructed as a
uniquely important period and this has led to
a shift from ‘quantity’ to ‘quality’: parents
now have fewer children and lavish more
attention and resources on these few
Application
• Use your knowledge of the social
construction of childhood (Topic 2) to show
how the factors that created modern
childhood also lead to smaller families
Effects of a falling birth rate
• Lower birth rates and fertility rates have
several effects on the family and society
• E.g. Having fewer children means women
are freer to go out to work,  creating the
dual earner couple
cont. Effects of a falling birth rate
1. The dependency ratio: is the relationship
between the size of the working population and
the size of the non-working (dependent)
population
 the working population’s earning and taxes
support the dependent population
 children are a large part of the dependent
population, so fewer children reduces the
‘burden of dependency’ on the working
population
cont. Effects of a falling birth rate
• Public services: Fewer schools and child
health services may be needed, and less
needs to be spent on maternity and
paternity leave
• However, these are political decision – e.g.
government can choose either to reduce
the number of schools or to have smaller
class sizes instead
Deaths
The number of deaths has been fairly stable since 1900 (about 600,000 per year),
but there have been fluctuations, e.g. The two world wars and the 1918 flu
epidemic
The death rate is the number of deaths per thousand of the population per year
It has almost halved from 19 in 1900, down to 10 by 2007
Interpretation
• Be clear about the differences between rates
and numbers or totals
• Rates are always ‘out of’ something (usually
1,000)
• The death rate fell despite the number staying
constant  because population grew
The death rate
• The death rate began falling from about 1870,
continuing until 1930
• It rose slightly during the 1930’s and 1940’s
due to economic depression and World War 2
• Since the 1950’s it has declined slightly
Reasons for the fall in death rate
• Up to 1970, about ¾ of the decline was due to a
fall in deaths from infectious diseases such as
TB, measles, smallpox, diarrhoea and typhoid
• This decline was largely brought about by
changing social factors including:
1. Improved nutrition
2. Medical improvements
3. Public health improvements
4. Other social changes
Analysis
• It’s important to explain how each of these
factors helped reduce the death rate
1. Improved nutrition (McKeowan (1972)
• According to McKeowan (1972): better diet
accounted for at least ½ the reduction in the
death rate, by increasing people’s resistance
to infection
2. Medical improvements
• Before the 1950’s, medical improvements played
almost NO part in reducing death rates from
infection
• From the 1950’s, the death rate fell due partly to
medical factors i.e.
- Vaccination,
- Antibiotics,
- Blood transfusion
- Better maternity services
- The creation of the NHS (1949)
3. Public health improvements
• More effective government with the power to
pass and enforce laws led to improved public
health
• E.g. Better housing
- Purer drinking water
- Cleaner air
- Laws against the adulteration of food
- Improved sewage disposal
4. Other social changes
• Other social changes that reduced the death
rate include: the decline of more dangerous
manual occupations
• E.g. Mining
- smaller families reduced the transmission of
infection
- Greater public knowledge of the cause of
illness and higher incomes
Evaluation
• Evaluate the reason for the falling death rate
by noting that although the medical
profession often claim the credit, social and
economic factors had much more impact
overall
Life expectancy
• Life expectancy: refers to how long on average a
person born in a given year can expect to live
• Life expectancy has greatly increased since
1900:
For babies born in 1900
it was 50 years for M, 57 for F
For babies born in 2005
it was 77 for M, 81 for F
cont. Life expectancy
• Falling infant mortality: low life expectancy in
1900 was largely due to the IMR pulling down
the average life expectancy of the population
as a whole
• As the IMR fell  life expectancy rose
Application
• Apply your knowledge of reasons for the fall
in the IMR to explain how this led to an
increase in life expectancy
The ageing population
 The UK population is ageing.
 In 1971, the average age was 34 years; it is now nearly 40.
 By 2031, it will reach 42.6.
 The number of over-65’s will over-take the number of under-16’s for
the first time ever in 2014
There are 3 main reasons for this ageing...
3 main reasons for this ageing
• Increasing life expectancy  people are living
longer
• Low infant mortality  babies no longer die
in large numbers
• Declining fertility  fewer young people are
being born
Effects of an ageing population
• An ageing population has several social and
economic effects:
1. Public service
2. More one-person pensioner households
3. The rising dependency ratio
4. Ageism
1. Public services
• Older people consume more health and social
care services
2. More one-person pensioner
households
• These now account for (1/7) one in every
seven households
3. The rising dependency ratio
• The non-working old need to provided for by
those of working age
• E.g. Through taxation to pay for pensions and
health care
• As the number of retired people rises, the
dependency ratio increases
4. Ageism
• Age statuses are socially constructed
• Old age is often constructed as a problem
• Negative stereotyping often portrays the old
as incompetent and a burden
 (contrast this with traditional societies,
where age brings higher status, not lower)
Analysis
• Explain how old age is constructed as
dependency because of a compulsory
retirement age
• Compare it with childhood: both old and
young are excluded from the labour market
Hirsch (2005): Policy implications
• Hirsch (2005) argues that we will need new
policies to finance a longer old age
• This could be done either by paying more in
taxes or by raising the retirement age, or
both
• E.g. The increase in women’s pensionable age
from 60 to 65
Migration
Migration is the movement of people. It can be internal (within a country)
or international. Migration affects the size and age structure of the
population. Until the 1980’s, more people left the UK than entered it.
Immigration
• From 1900 to the 1940’s, the largest
immigrant groups in the UK were the Irish,
Europeans Jewish and people of British
descent from Canada and the USA
• Very few immigrants were non-white
cont. Immigration
• White and non-white immigrants:
• During the 1950’s -70’s, non-white
immigrants began to come from the
Caribbean, Africa, and South Asia
• By 2001, minority ethnic groups accounted
for 7.9% of the population
• However, most immigrants to the UK were
white Irish and Europeans
cont. Immigration
• Despite this, immigration and nationality acts
from 1962 to 1990 placed severe restrictions
on non-white immigration
• By the 1980’s, non-white accounted for barely
a quarter (1/4) of immigrants
• The mainly white countries of the European
Union (EU) became the chief source of
immigrants
Application
• If the question asks about the consequences
of migration, discuss the impact of
immigration on family diversity
• E.g. Asian extended families and black lone
parent families
Emigration
• Since 1900, most emigrants have gone to the
USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and
South Africa
• The main reasons for emigrating have been
economic:
 ‘Push’ factors, e.g. Unemployment and
economic recession
 ‘Pull’ factors, e.g. Higher wages or better
opportunities
Evaluation
• Assess the importance of economic factors by
referring to the role of non-economic reasons
for migrating
• E.g. To flee political or ethnic persecution

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GCE Sociology Revision (AQA)- Unit 1 Demography (4)

  • 1. Unit 1: Families and Households 4) Demography
  • 2. Population growth • Demography: is the study of population, including factors affecting its size and growth • Whether a population is growing, declining or stable is affected by four factors:  Births and Immigration increases the population  Deaths and Emigration decreases the population
  • 3. cont. Population growth • Natural change: is the number of births minus the number of deaths • Net migration: is the number immigrating into country minus the number emigrating from it • The UK’s population grew from 37m. in 1901 to 61m. today and should reach 71m. by 2031 • Growth has been mostly due to natural change rather than net migration
  • 4. Interpretation • Address all parts of the question • E.g. If it’s about causes and effects of a population change, make sure you deal with both
  • 5. Births There are two measures of births 1. birth rate 2. total fertility rate
  • 6. 1. The birth rate • The birth rate: is the number of live births per 1,000 of the population per year • There has been a long-term decline in the birth rate • In 1900, it was almost 29 • By 2007, it had fallen by more than 60%,  to under 11 • But there have been fluctuations • There were 3 ‘baby booms’: after the two world wars, and in the 1960’s • The rate fell sharply in the 1970’s, rose during the 1980’s and early 1990’s, and then fell until the recent increase since 2001
  • 7. 2. The total fertility rate • The total fertility rate: is the average number of children a woman will have during her fertile years (aged 15-44) • In the 1960’s baby boom, it reached an average of 2.95 children per woman, declining to an all-time low of 1.63 in 2001, before rising slightly to 1.84 in 2006 • The total fertility rate obviously affects family and household size – the more children a woman has, the bigger the family: 1. More women are remaining childless nowadays 2. Women are having children later: the average age is now almost 30
  • 8. Analysis • Family size doesn’t just depend on the number of children • E.g. Divorce divides a family into two smaller ones and reduces the chances of the woman having more children
  • 9. Reasons for the fall in birth rate Many social, economic, legal and technological factors are responsible for the falling birth rate and total fertility rate: 1. Changes in the position of women 2. Fall in the infant mortality rate 3. Children as an economic liability 4. Child-centredness
  • 10. 1. Changes in the position of women • Increased educational opportunities • More women working • Changes in attitudes to family life and women’s role • Easier access to divorce • Access to abortion and contraception
  • 11. Analysis • Explain how such factors affect the birth rate • E.g. ‘Better-educated women have more options: they can choose a career rather than marriage and family’
  • 12. 2. Fall in the infant mortality rate • The infant mortality rate (IMR): is the number of infants who die before their first birthday, per 1,000 babies born alive, per year • The IMR has fallen greatly in the last century • In 1900, it was 154; by 2007, it was 5 • A fall in the IMR may cause a fall in the birth rate: if infants survive, parents will have fewer of them
  • 13. Reason for the fall in IMR • Reasons include improvement in: - Housing - Sanitation - Nutrition Mothers: - Knowledge of hygiene and child health - Health services for mothers and children • Medical factors did NOT play much until the 1950’s, when the IMR began to fall due to mass immunisation, antibiotics, and improved midwifery and obstetrics
  • 14. 3. Children as an economic liability • Until the late 19th century, children were an economic asset because they went to work from an early age • Now they are an economic liability:  Laws banning child labour: and introducing compulsory schooling mean they remain economically dependent for longer  Changing norms: about children’s right to a high standard of living raises their cost  As a result, parents may be unable to afford to have a large family
  • 15. 4. Child-centredness • Childhood is now socially constructed as a uniquely important period and this has led to a shift from ‘quantity’ to ‘quality’: parents now have fewer children and lavish more attention and resources on these few
  • 16. Application • Use your knowledge of the social construction of childhood (Topic 2) to show how the factors that created modern childhood also lead to smaller families
  • 17. Effects of a falling birth rate • Lower birth rates and fertility rates have several effects on the family and society • E.g. Having fewer children means women are freer to go out to work,  creating the dual earner couple
  • 18. cont. Effects of a falling birth rate 1. The dependency ratio: is the relationship between the size of the working population and the size of the non-working (dependent) population  the working population’s earning and taxes support the dependent population  children are a large part of the dependent population, so fewer children reduces the ‘burden of dependency’ on the working population
  • 19. cont. Effects of a falling birth rate • Public services: Fewer schools and child health services may be needed, and less needs to be spent on maternity and paternity leave • However, these are political decision – e.g. government can choose either to reduce the number of schools or to have smaller class sizes instead
  • 20. Deaths The number of deaths has been fairly stable since 1900 (about 600,000 per year), but there have been fluctuations, e.g. The two world wars and the 1918 flu epidemic The death rate is the number of deaths per thousand of the population per year It has almost halved from 19 in 1900, down to 10 by 2007
  • 21. Interpretation • Be clear about the differences between rates and numbers or totals • Rates are always ‘out of’ something (usually 1,000) • The death rate fell despite the number staying constant  because population grew
  • 22. The death rate • The death rate began falling from about 1870, continuing until 1930 • It rose slightly during the 1930’s and 1940’s due to economic depression and World War 2 • Since the 1950’s it has declined slightly
  • 23. Reasons for the fall in death rate • Up to 1970, about ¾ of the decline was due to a fall in deaths from infectious diseases such as TB, measles, smallpox, diarrhoea and typhoid • This decline was largely brought about by changing social factors including: 1. Improved nutrition 2. Medical improvements 3. Public health improvements 4. Other social changes
  • 24. Analysis • It’s important to explain how each of these factors helped reduce the death rate
  • 25. 1. Improved nutrition (McKeowan (1972) • According to McKeowan (1972): better diet accounted for at least ½ the reduction in the death rate, by increasing people’s resistance to infection
  • 26. 2. Medical improvements • Before the 1950’s, medical improvements played almost NO part in reducing death rates from infection • From the 1950’s, the death rate fell due partly to medical factors i.e. - Vaccination, - Antibiotics, - Blood transfusion - Better maternity services - The creation of the NHS (1949)
  • 27. 3. Public health improvements • More effective government with the power to pass and enforce laws led to improved public health • E.g. Better housing - Purer drinking water - Cleaner air - Laws against the adulteration of food - Improved sewage disposal
  • 28. 4. Other social changes • Other social changes that reduced the death rate include: the decline of more dangerous manual occupations • E.g. Mining - smaller families reduced the transmission of infection - Greater public knowledge of the cause of illness and higher incomes
  • 29. Evaluation • Evaluate the reason for the falling death rate by noting that although the medical profession often claim the credit, social and economic factors had much more impact overall
  • 30. Life expectancy • Life expectancy: refers to how long on average a person born in a given year can expect to live • Life expectancy has greatly increased since 1900: For babies born in 1900 it was 50 years for M, 57 for F For babies born in 2005 it was 77 for M, 81 for F
  • 31. cont. Life expectancy • Falling infant mortality: low life expectancy in 1900 was largely due to the IMR pulling down the average life expectancy of the population as a whole • As the IMR fell  life expectancy rose
  • 32. Application • Apply your knowledge of reasons for the fall in the IMR to explain how this led to an increase in life expectancy
  • 33. The ageing population  The UK population is ageing.  In 1971, the average age was 34 years; it is now nearly 40.  By 2031, it will reach 42.6.  The number of over-65’s will over-take the number of under-16’s for the first time ever in 2014 There are 3 main reasons for this ageing...
  • 34. 3 main reasons for this ageing • Increasing life expectancy  people are living longer • Low infant mortality  babies no longer die in large numbers • Declining fertility  fewer young people are being born
  • 35. Effects of an ageing population • An ageing population has several social and economic effects: 1. Public service 2. More one-person pensioner households 3. The rising dependency ratio 4. Ageism
  • 36. 1. Public services • Older people consume more health and social care services
  • 37. 2. More one-person pensioner households • These now account for (1/7) one in every seven households
  • 38. 3. The rising dependency ratio • The non-working old need to provided for by those of working age • E.g. Through taxation to pay for pensions and health care • As the number of retired people rises, the dependency ratio increases
  • 39. 4. Ageism • Age statuses are socially constructed • Old age is often constructed as a problem • Negative stereotyping often portrays the old as incompetent and a burden  (contrast this with traditional societies, where age brings higher status, not lower)
  • 40. Analysis • Explain how old age is constructed as dependency because of a compulsory retirement age • Compare it with childhood: both old and young are excluded from the labour market
  • 41. Hirsch (2005): Policy implications • Hirsch (2005) argues that we will need new policies to finance a longer old age • This could be done either by paying more in taxes or by raising the retirement age, or both • E.g. The increase in women’s pensionable age from 60 to 65
  • 42. Migration Migration is the movement of people. It can be internal (within a country) or international. Migration affects the size and age structure of the population. Until the 1980’s, more people left the UK than entered it.
  • 43. Immigration • From 1900 to the 1940’s, the largest immigrant groups in the UK were the Irish, Europeans Jewish and people of British descent from Canada and the USA • Very few immigrants were non-white
  • 44. cont. Immigration • White and non-white immigrants: • During the 1950’s -70’s, non-white immigrants began to come from the Caribbean, Africa, and South Asia • By 2001, minority ethnic groups accounted for 7.9% of the population • However, most immigrants to the UK were white Irish and Europeans
  • 45. cont. Immigration • Despite this, immigration and nationality acts from 1962 to 1990 placed severe restrictions on non-white immigration • By the 1980’s, non-white accounted for barely a quarter (1/4) of immigrants • The mainly white countries of the European Union (EU) became the chief source of immigrants
  • 46. Application • If the question asks about the consequences of migration, discuss the impact of immigration on family diversity • E.g. Asian extended families and black lone parent families
  • 47. Emigration • Since 1900, most emigrants have gone to the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa • The main reasons for emigrating have been economic:  ‘Push’ factors, e.g. Unemployment and economic recession  ‘Pull’ factors, e.g. Higher wages or better opportunities
  • 48. Evaluation • Assess the importance of economic factors by referring to the role of non-economic reasons for migrating • E.g. To flee political or ethnic persecution